THE BIG JOB
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Welcome to the 'Big Job'
What is the 'big job'? Well the Big Job is an idea that me and one of my friends came up with when we had ran out of sane thoughts. Basically the Big Job has one primary objective: To hold the world to ransom for one single day.
The Big Job is operated by working class ordinary people who proberly out number people with influence and power by a billion to one, yet we all take it up the tail pipe every single day of our lives, and most of us don't even realise it. Well the Big Job gets right to the point and says "NO" we won't just be happy with what we have, and "YES" we are gonna do something about it.
Interested???
It's hard to think of what is worth thinking rather than the thoughts I am forced to think everyday, What is really worth thinking about? This is one question we need to answer to get what we want from our lives.
Anarchism:
"Political theory opposed to all forms of Government. Anarchists believe that the highest attainment of humanity is the freedom of the individual to express himself, unhindered by any form of repression or control from without. The belief that all Governments rest on violence to control their subjects." - 1984 Funk & Wagnalls Encyclopedia

People Power
You only have to think a short while back to the oil blockade to notice that a relativly small group of people can bring this country to it's knees. As we found out that without a garranteed constant supply of a item such as oil the country and eventually the world is thrown into a state of panic buying and confusion. Even rumours of such an event can throw everyone into the same state.
if you have any veiws on this please...
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The Famous Picture of Hope - George F. Watts R.A.
In classical mythology, Hope is portrayed as a female entity sealed inside Pandora's jar by Prometheus. Hope remained inside the jar when the evils were released. Though Hope is more a concept than a character she is occasionally personified as in this painting by Watts.

Watts' Hope portrays a blindfolded woman with a broken lyre. Watts was expressing the sentiments of such popular aphorisms as 'Never despair' or 'Where there is life there is hope', though his painting seems to be suggesting the opposite. The Victorian public understood his message, however, and the painting became enormously popular, especially after it was reproduced as an engraving.




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